Today, NLPC filed a Complaint with the Federal Election Commission alleging that Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) violated federal election law in a transaction related to her so-called slate mailer during her last re-election campaign.

The transaction was a payment to Waters’ campaign fund from the Democratic State Central Committee of California (DSCCC) in the amount of $35,000 for the inclusion of then-Senate candidate, and now Senator Kamala Harris, on Waters’ slate mailer. Whereas candidates like Harris may legally pay Waters’ campaign for the proportional costs of their inclusion on her slate mailer, it is not legal for such payment to be made by a third party like the DSCCC.

On May 5, 2010, when Harris was a San Francisco district attorney and running for attorney general in the state, her campaign committee, Kamala Harris For AG 2010, paid Waters’s campaign committee, Citizens for Waters, $20,000 to appear on her slate mailer announcing the endorsement. Harris made three payments totaling $33,000 to Waters’s campaign committees throughout the 2010 election cycle. Harris won her election for attorney general.

During the 2016 election cycle, as Harris was running for U.S. Senate, Harris’s campaign committee, Kamala Harris for Senate, made a $30,000 payment in May 2016 to again appear on Waters’s endorsement mailer. Harris trounced former Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez in the race to replace Barbara Boxer in the Senate.

Please note that the 2016 payment from Harris was in addition to the $35,000 the NLPC claims was paid to Waters on behalf of Harris through the DSCCC.

Are we starting to see how much money is being transferred to Waters’ coffers?

This is only the tip of the iceberg. Senator Kamala Harris and the DSCCC are not the only parties interested in paying for a Waters’ endorsement.

Other candidates gladly pay tens of thousands of dollars for the right to appear on her slate mailers and receive her endorsement.

The California congresswoman has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars each election cycle from some of her state’s biggest politicians paying to be listed on her slate mailers—sample ballots traditionally mailed out to about 200,000 voters in Los Angeles highlighting whom she supports.

To add insult to injury, not only is Maxine Waters filling her coffers with the campaign contributions of other candidates, she has found a way to funnel $750,000 to her daughter as a result.

Waters runs a slate mailer, or endorsement mailer, operation through Citizens for Waters, her campaign committee, and has done so for years. The operation has proved lucrative to both the campaign’s coffers and to Karen Waters, Maxine’s daughter.

Karen has collected more than $750,000 in payments for running the operation, the Washington Free Beacon previously reported. The slate mailers also pull in lucrative cash for the Waters campaign. In order to appear on the mailer, a politician must make a donation to the committee.

This has been going on for years and nothing has been done about it. CalWatchDog.com was reporting on Waters’ controversial tactics back in 2010:

A more private Waters family business interest has generally escaped the media’s recent attention. Federal campaign records reveal that, since 2005, Congresswoman Waters’ campaign committees have paid more than $350,000 – and currently claim to owe another $82,000 – in management fees to an entity known as “Progressive Connections.” Don’t bother looking online for detailed information about Progressive Connections, as this firm doesn’t aggressively advertise. Records reveal that Progressive Connections is the fictitious business name used by Maxine Waters’ daughter, Karen Waters.

Rep. Waters has for many years operated a slate mail business that personally benefits her daughter. In each election cycle, Waters releases a voter guide featuring her picture and a list of candidates she endorses and ballot measures she supports. Candidates and ballot measure committees pay to be listed on the guide. Until the 2004 election, Karen Waters ran the operation through a state committee called L.A. Vote.

Starting with the 2004 cycle, Maxine Waters’ federal campaign committees have taken responsibility for collecting the checks from candidates appearing on the guide. They also pay the bills for producing and mailing the guide. Every cycle, one of the largest bills is Karen Waters’ management fee. Sometimes it’s the largest bill. The Waters committee confirmed in an FEC report just weeks ago that the operation has continued right up through the 2010 primary season. Indeed, the June 2010 primary saw huge payments by a few candidates to appear on the voter guide.

How much is Maxine Waters’ endorsement worth?

If you look at the results of the last two general elections in her district (California’s 43rd District), her endorsement is worth a lot. She dominated her opponents in both 2016 and 2014: